The Association between Subjective and Objective Financial Knowledge: Path Analysis to Investor Behavior by Age

Abstract Financial literacy affects stock market participation, as well as individuals’ age, gender, income, and education level. However, measuring financial literacy is more appropriate to identify individuals with strong knowledge of finance rather than average individuals with general knowledge. This could be problematic to identify general participation of the stock market and investment as more individuals are now participating without having to have such knowledge. This study explored how individuals’ subjective financial skills and well-being affect investment participation by age. Overall, males are likely to participate more in both retirement and non-retirement investment. In between the boomer generation and younger group, the younger generation who reported participating in a non-retirement investment, such as stock market were having a higher score on subjective financial well-being (STDYX = .052, 95% CI [.07, .08]; p < .05). Importantly, among the older group, subjective financial skill score becomes a predictor of participating stock market (STDYX = .09, 95% CI [.01, .17]; p < .05). As the result suggest, while younger participants focus more on financial well-being, such as having security on finances, when they are participating in a non-retirement investment, whereas older adults are likely to invest based on their beliefs on financial skills regardless of secured finances. A retirement plan has shifted toward less on savings and more on investing. Older adults are now interested more in participating in investments, such as the stock market than the young population, and the proper preparedness for those older adults in participating in the investment is needed.


RETIREMENT, HAPPINESS, AND HEALTH IN JAPAN
Shohei Okamoto, and Erika Kobayashi, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology, Itabashi-ku, Tokyo, Japan While health effects of retirement have been well studied so far, previous findings remain inconclusive, and mechanisms underlying the linkage between retirement and health are unclear. This can be driven by regional or cohort heterogeneity as well as methodological differences, such as outcome measures and identification strategies; thus, much evidence needs to be accumulated. Utilising a national household survey conducted every year in 2004-2019 in Japan (the Japan Household Panel Survey), we evaluate the effects of retirement among Japanese adults aged 50-75 on their happiness and health in addition to other outcomes that could attribute to happiness or health changes (e.g. health behaviours, time use for some activities, and the expenses by item). As outcomes are not measured every year, we analyse 4,340-7,902 person-year observations by 756-1,389 individuals with the necessary information from 2009. To deal with the potential endogeneity of retirement, we adopt an instrumental variable approach utilising changes in retirement policy and public pension eligible age. Consequently, instruments seem valid only for men, and we find that retirement increases male retirees' happiness and decreases psychological stress while effects on other health measures are not observed. Although their satisfaction with their income decline, perhaps because of the loss of their wage income, they tend to increase the proportion of expenses for cultural and recreational activities. Enhancement in personal life quality by more leisure activities and stress reduction from work, rather than improvements in health behaviours and physical health, may be key to understanding health benefits in retirement.

SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS, TIME SCARCITY AND WELL-BEING IN RETIREMENT Boroka Bo, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, United States
We tend to think of retirement as a great equalizer when it comes to relief from the pernicious time scarcity characterizing the lives of many individuals in the labor force. Puzzlingly, this is not entirely the case. Using data from the MTUS (N=15,390) in combination with long-term participant observation (980 hours) and in-depth interviews (N=53), I show that socioeconomic characteristics are important determinants of retiree time scarcity. Neighborhood disadvantage gets under the skin via time exchanges that are forged by both neighborhood and peer network characteristics. The SES-based 'time projects of surviving and thriving' undergirding the experience of time scarcity lead to divergent strategies of action and differing consequences for well-being. For the advantaged, the experience of time scarcity is protective for well-being in later life, as it emerges from the 'work of thriving' and managing a relative abundance of choices. For the disadvantaged, the later life experience of time scarcity is shaped by cumulative inequality, further exacerbating inequalities in well-being. The final section of the article offers an analysis and interpretation of these results, putting retiree time scarcity in conversation with the broader literature on socioeconomic status and well-being.

THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN SUBJECTIVE AND OBJECTIVE FINANCIAL KNOWLEDGE: PATH ANALYSIS TO INVESTOR BEHAVIOR BY AGE
Rain Lee, 1 Jin Sil, 2 and Euijin Jung, 3 , 1. Yeshiva University,New York,New York,United States,2. UC San Diego,San Diago,California,United States,3

. University of Kansas, Kansas, Kansas, United States
Financial literacy affects stock market participation, as well as individuals' age, gender, income, and education level. However, measuring financial literacy is more appropriate to identify individuals with strong knowledge of finance rather than average individuals with general knowledge. This could be problematic to identify general participation of the stock market and investment as more individuals are now participating without having to have such knowledge. This study explored how individuals' subjective financial skills and well-being affect investment participation by age. Overall, males are likely to participate more in both retirement and non-retirement investment. In between the boomer generation and younger group, the younger generation who reported participating in a non-retirement investment, such as stock market were having a higher score on subjective financial well-being (STDYX = .052, 95% CI [.07, .08]; p < .05). Importantly, among the older group, subjective financial skill score becomes a predictor of participating stock market (STDYX = .09, 95% CI [.01, .17]; p < .05). As the result suggest, while younger participants focus more on financial well-being, such as having security on finances, when they are participating in a nonretirement investment, whereas older adults are likely to invest based on their beliefs on financial skills regardless of secured finances. A retirement plan has shifted toward less on savings and more on investing. Older adults are now interested more in participating in investments, such as the stock market than the young population, and the proper preparedness for those older adults in participating in the investment is needed. Aging, 2021, Vol. 5, No. S1

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GSA 2021 Annual Scientific Meeting